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Aug 1, 2009
08/09
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this is a first-order issue for us. the consequences of living in a state of fear, rather than a state of preparedness, are enormous. we may be better prepared as a nation than we were on 9/11, but, we are nowhere near as prepared as we need to be. there are of course aspects of cowering the terror threat that are inherently governmental. but, the smart government is one that knows what it does best, and which helps other do their best as well. so, hears how we're looking at this. first, with respect to individuals in the private sector, we are taking a much closer look at how we can support and form our greatest asset, individual citizens, and with them, the private sector. you are the ones who know if something is not right in your community, such as a suspicious package. or unusual activity. three years ago, it was an attentive store clerk who told authorities about men trying to duplicate extremist dvds. this led federal agents to eventually round up a plot to kill american soldiers at the fort dix army base. here i
this is a first-order issue for us. the consequences of living in a state of fear, rather than a state of preparedness, are enormous. we may be better prepared as a nation than we were on 9/11, but, we are nowhere near as prepared as we need to be. there are of course aspects of cowering the terror threat that are inherently governmental. but, the smart government is one that knows what it does best, and which helps other do their best as well. so, hears how we're looking at this. first, with...
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Aug 2, 2009
08/09
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i am not going to use lebron madison r. ethiopia or tell you fannie mae did it all in distorted the numbers are tell you everything is bad about private enterprise. i am going to tell you we had better get some balance in america and we have lost that. the consequence of losing that has been a severe economic cataclysms that we didn't need. we did not need to become-- who brought the soviet union? please charles, let's not jump from one extreme to the other. i am not talking about the soviet union that we need some balance. eucom everybody on this jury is paying the price for that and if we don't have government mr. forbes, steve, and since he is my neighbor i can call him steve, if we don't get government intervening, economies go down farther and farther and farther. i would love to talk to you a little bit about the new deal. we don't have time and i hope we have another debate judge and i hope you are presiding. thank you. >> thank you very much. [applause] mr. moore. >> your honor it has been a pleasure to be here with
i am not going to use lebron madison r. ethiopia or tell you fannie mae did it all in distorted the numbers are tell you everything is bad about private enterprise. i am going to tell you we had better get some balance in america and we have lost that. the consequence of losing that has been a severe economic cataclysms that we didn't need. we did not need to become-- who brought the soviet union? please charles, let's not jump from one extreme to the other. i am not talking about the soviet...
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Aug 24, 2009
08/09
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he wants us to look like spain, italy sweden. it doesn't work. those countries have had higher unemployment rates they have more people in poverty. they have not created jobs. the united states under the free enterprise system from 1980 to 2007 created 46 million new jobs. over that same time frame europe created 5 million jobs. we created 9 times as many jobs. we created much more wealth and so on. our founding fathers set up a system that was ingenuous. i am not making the case for no government. mr. casey made that case very impassionately. we do need a rule of law and we do need a court system and we do need roads and obviously, we need a national security system and a national defense but we do not have to have the government meddling in every industry and what has been the result finally of all of this government that we have seen emerged in the last six months under george bush and barack obama. we are now leaving to our children, our most precious assets -- i think everyone in this room care about is the future that we leave our children.
he wants us to look like spain, italy sweden. it doesn't work. those countries have had higher unemployment rates they have more people in poverty. they have not created jobs. the united states under the free enterprise system from 1980 to 2007 created 46 million new jobs. over that same time frame europe created 5 million jobs. we created 9 times as many jobs. we created much more wealth and so on. our founding fathers set up a system that was ingenuous. i am not making the case for no...
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Aug 1, 2009
08/09
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it didn't work for us in the 1930's, didn't work for japan in the 1990's, won't work for us today, no. >> thank you, sir. >> mr. madrick, we would like you to cross-examine. >> thank you, judge. >> mr. forbes, it's nice to see you. >> nice to see you, we are neighbors, even if we're on the opposite side. >> it's good to see you. any great companies in sweden? >> any great business enterprises in sweden or france or germany? >> there are great enterprises all around the world, except for perhaps north korea, but the key question is not just a handful of great enterprises. the key question is how many small businesses are created, how many jobs are created in the private sector. >> you don't think there are jobs created in those countries? >> there are jobs created, but if you look at the facts over the last 25, 30 years, in the private sector, the united states proportionately created far nor jobs that have been created in western you europe and scandinavia. >> please tell the jurors, what has the median wage of mail workers done in the last 30 or 40 years, since the reagan -- since pr
it didn't work for us in the 1930's, didn't work for japan in the 1990's, won't work for us today, no. >> thank you, sir. >> mr. madrick, we would like you to cross-examine. >> thank you, judge. >> mr. forbes, it's nice to see you. >> nice to see you, we are neighbors, even if we're on the opposite side. >> it's good to see you. any great companies in sweden? >> any great business enterprises in sweden or france or germany? >> there are great...
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Aug 17, 2009
08/09
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write us is story because i used to love to scribble and write things. and i really honestly thought, oh, that's going to be simple. i can just write a small thing like an asop's fable or something very short. and i thought no this is my stepdaughter and it might be a wonderful way to help us bond. and i came up with a little idea and kind of kept fleshing it out and if it wasn't for my husband, blake edwards, i don't think i would have ever finished it. i didn't have confidence and i didn't know what i was doing. julie, it's a sweet idea -- >> and you've been hooked ever since. >> and that was 40 years ago, just about. so i've been writing ever since. >> and so how many children's books have you authored? >> emma, we've done 17 together. >> and then you've done four on your own. >> four on my own. plus a memoir. so we go back and forth really and we have more coming -- >> emma walton hamilton, do you live close to each other, do you email each other? >> unfortunately, we live most of the year on opposite coasts. we always work best when we're together a
write us is story because i used to love to scribble and write things. and i really honestly thought, oh, that's going to be simple. i can just write a small thing like an asop's fable or something very short. and i thought no this is my stepdaughter and it might be a wonderful way to help us bond. and i came up with a little idea and kind of kept fleshing it out and if it wasn't for my husband, blake edwards, i don't think i would have ever finished it. i didn't have confidence and i didn't...
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Aug 19, 2009
08/09
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we do have a national surveillance system which we do have providers who send us specimens to give us an idea of when influenza enters the community and some basic idea which we extrapolate up from as to how many people might be sick with influenza. and then we count hospitalizations and deaths because those are much more specific and then you have to not only come in with a disease that people think is influenza but you have to then test for it. you have to get a positive culture. and if not all those things are done, then you really don't get an accurate count. so-so our surveillance system to give us an idea when a disease enters the community and some understanding of what's going on. and this gives you an idea of what actually happened for this current bout of influenza-like illness and week one is in january and then it moves on to the years. you can see we're now below our national baseline even though we know we've had some outbreaks in some camps and some other places with this new virus. this also gives you an idea of kind of what the state outlook looked like in the united
we do have a national surveillance system which we do have providers who send us specimens to give us an idea of when influenza enters the community and some basic idea which we extrapolate up from as to how many people might be sick with influenza. and then we count hospitalizations and deaths because those are much more specific and then you have to not only come in with a disease that people think is influenza but you have to then test for it. you have to get a positive culture. and if not...
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Aug 10, 2009
08/09
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paradigm we have used to date. i would argue that is too loose and not a useful way of thinking about the category of people we want to detain and i would argue is there any different legislation of the category of the two tenable person. i can describe for you if your interested but it is more closely based, to some degree on the notion or the standards of the foreign intelligence surveillance act and almost more than either of those individual dangerousness which we use of the context of mental illness to detain dangerous paranoid schizophrenics were people who pose a serious danger to themselves or other people. >> that will do it for our our progress hope you found this as enthralling as you did. i want to thank ben wittes, congresswoman barbara lee and charlie savage their books will be on sale i assume you will sign for a short time? thank you for being with us. [applause] >> good afternoon. it's nice to see you all here today. >> are we on? >> i am. it's great to see you all here today. good afternoon. here
paradigm we have used to date. i would argue that is too loose and not a useful way of thinking about the category of people we want to detain and i would argue is there any different legislation of the category of the two tenable person. i can describe for you if your interested but it is more closely based, to some degree on the notion or the standards of the foreign intelligence surveillance act and almost more than either of those individual dangerousness which we use of the context of...
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Aug 10, 2009
08/09
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so where i used public figures yes, their real names are used. >> host: do you have a sort of long author's node. >> guest: and very proud of the author's note. i am very clear about my process and it's a fun topic. people like to talk about on addiction and what it is but i am clear in the opening of my books what i do and how i might buy books, why do dialogue and how anybody who has a problem with the non-fiction try to go to vegas with me and mit kids, we can to go near a black track table. if the story wasn't true why aren't we able to gamble? ask the casino that. it's part of the fun of what i do. >> host: bringing down the house was made into a movie with kevin spacey. >> guest: yes, it was, "21". >> host: and this one will be made a movie? >> guest: yes, kevin spacey and the same group that did "21" excepted the addition of scott, which is a nice addition and an error in who is doing the screenplay. it's been a fun process because he has been adapting while i write the book which isn't normally what is done. normally i write the book -- he is a genius and you can't do better than hi
so where i used public figures yes, their real names are used. >> host: do you have a sort of long author's node. >> guest: and very proud of the author's note. i am very clear about my process and it's a fun topic. people like to talk about on addiction and what it is but i am clear in the opening of my books what i do and how i might buy books, why do dialogue and how anybody who has a problem with the non-fiction try to go to vegas with me and mit kids, we can to go near a black...
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Aug 9, 2009
08/09
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this one guy took us through. one of the questions we asked was what about your trial, what about your people, were they guilty? the rosenbergs, were they guilty? and the guys said he was and she wasn't. i thought that was rather interesting that he said anything at all. i was wondering whether you made any effort to get opinions from that country. >> great question. you helped me. one of your friends was working for john kerry. >> oh, yes. >> i lived in massachusetts, i am a red sox fan. old brooklyn dodgers fan just like my parents, yankee-hater which is why i was married in boston. ivy meeropol has me on the film angrily watching -- >> a moment of levity. >> we went to senator john kerry and asked that the files of the soviet secret service whenever they were called, this was after the soviet union had dissolved, it was now the russian federation and we had john kerry send a letter, we actually thought we might be able to do it because the general had done something similar in another case, he examine their fil
this one guy took us through. one of the questions we asked was what about your trial, what about your people, were they guilty? the rosenbergs, were they guilty? and the guys said he was and she wasn't. i thought that was rather interesting that he said anything at all. i was wondering whether you made any effort to get opinions from that country. >> great question. you helped me. one of your friends was working for john kerry. >> oh, yes. >> i lived in massachusetts, i am a...
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Aug 13, 2009
08/09
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and will they give us permission to do it? that's really historically what we most of the time study in terms of great political leadership. however, if you are trying to fundamentally change an existing system, whether it's a school board, city or county government, state government, or federal government, you're probably dealing with staffs that have been trained in the old order. so when you come in and you say we're -- it's a little bit like deciding you're going to run a very inexpensive restaurant like mcdonald's with a team which has been trained to run a gourmet restaurant. if you don't fundamentally retrain them they don't understand why it's okay to have an hour and 35-minute service. and they don't understand why you've given up on the white table cloths and the crystal. and so there's a constant reversion to what they believe the norm is. this is an enormous challenge for republicans and for conservatives because almost -- so somebody says to me, i have a masters in public administration. the odds are very high the
and will they give us permission to do it? that's really historically what we most of the time study in terms of great political leadership. however, if you are trying to fundamentally change an existing system, whether it's a school board, city or county government, state government, or federal government, you're probably dealing with staffs that have been trained in the old order. so when you come in and you say we're -- it's a little bit like deciding you're going to run a very inexpensive...
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Aug 2, 2009
08/09
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you push us, we'll push back. christmas eve and the day before you go shopping, you get gifts, you have a big party. two cars full of ms gangsterred stopped the bus, they had an ak-47 and an m-16 or something and just start killing people. children, mothers, old men, the bus driver, the conductor, they were all killed. 26 people killed, 26 injured. the interesting afterstory to that case. nobody really knows where he is today. his name is annabell rivero presidents. -- potts. he escaped and came to the united states. he was arrested in texas. and he was a long-time gang member. he had a list of offenses. he was re-entering the united states after deportation. there were a lot of news stories about how this guy is going to get the -- the titanic is going to come down on him. the president of hon duh rats said we will get this guy. the deputy director said, we got him. the newspapers said he's going to be minimum of 10 years. then we'll send him back and let honduras deal with him. interesting happened. when his cas
you push us, we'll push back. christmas eve and the day before you go shopping, you get gifts, you have a big party. two cars full of ms gangsterred stopped the bus, they had an ak-47 and an m-16 or something and just start killing people. children, mothers, old men, the bus driver, the conductor, they were all killed. 26 people killed, 26 injured. the interesting afterstory to that case. nobody really knows where he is today. his name is annabell rivero presidents. -- potts. he escaped and...
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Aug 31, 2009
08/09
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>> it's weird that you use the word node. i was say that chinese organized ime as i've come to explain and bit fbi is very much a network kind of thing. sister ping was a node. the chinese, you have one person you can take down the fily. you start with the boss, you start rolling people and youan take out the family. hopefully they won't be replaced. in the snakehead, it's all network. sister ping is now in prison probably for the rest of her life. but others will step up. and so i think that it's such a big subject. but it's much more network and much more fluid. it's not a sense of high hierarchy. is triads. does that mean it's not crimil an ruthless? , it is. but in some ways this i a much more robust kind of system. one person gets arrested and someone else will step up a take their place. yes? >> this is related a little bit to the previous question. could you talk a bit about to what degree violence or least the threat of violence pyed in the snakehead process? >> yeah, absolutely. it played in both direct and indirect
>> it's weird that you use the word node. i was say that chinese organized ime as i've come to explain and bit fbi is very much a network kind of thing. sister ping was a node. the chinese, you have one person you can take down the fily. you start with the boss, you start rolling people and youan take out the family. hopefully they won't be replaced. in the snakehead, it's all network. sister ping is now in prison probably for the rest of her life. but others will step up. and so i think...
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Aug 3, 2009
08/09
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i used to do here when myself. i used to hang out in black neighborhoods. the women would have babies and the men would go to their houses and get the welfare check. this is why men were not around all the time. women were taking control, the women couldn't be parents, they became drug addicts themselves and they had no training in child care whatsoever and that's one of the big problems -- i'm disappointed with your remarks on gangs. you don't let somebody in their house being built lectures. you give too much authority. you and conservatives are backing police officers and not the constitution. >> host: we will get a response on his earlier response on bill cosby's speech and then professor gates. >> guest: i don't take it in terms of black society but he makes the important point about welfare and the welfare rules oftentimes not encouraging the presence of a man in the home and then let especially again in terms of the so-called underclass to some negative ramifications because then you have people engaged in single-parent households and lack of attenti
i used to do here when myself. i used to hang out in black neighborhoods. the women would have babies and the men would go to their houses and get the welfare check. this is why men were not around all the time. women were taking control, the women couldn't be parents, they became drug addicts themselves and they had no training in child care whatsoever and that's one of the big problems -- i'm disappointed with your remarks on gangs. you don't let somebody in their house being built lectures....
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Aug 9, 2009
08/09
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tell us what it was. >> it was good. we hit good, especially against halladay. you know, everybody knows he is tough, you know, but in the end, it was not good enough. today is another day. we have to come back tomorrow and see what happens tomorrow. >> you have been playing some shortstop behind some young pitchers. what did you see from brian? those three home runs undid him a little bit i yeah, leaving the pitch up there, playing in the big leagues, you pay. but he learns from that. he is a good guy, good pitcher. >> back to halladay, seems like you have faced some very tough pitchers on this road trip. seems like every day, you face a good one. >> yes. definitely. that's playing in the american league east. but you go out and play your game. >> tom: izturis with a .267 average with two home runs and 10 rbis. >> go out there and get only ins, you know, but i started to struggle a little bit but we got him out of there. i was fortunate to go out and get some innings. >> were you surprise that had brian was removed when he was? it was still early in the game. m
tell us what it was. >> it was good. we hit good, especially against halladay. you know, everybody knows he is tough, you know, but in the end, it was not good enough. today is another day. we have to come back tomorrow and see what happens tomorrow. >> you have been playing some shortstop behind some young pitchers. what did you see from brian? those three home runs undid him a little bit i yeah, leaving the pitch up there, playing in the big leagues, you pay. but he learns from...
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Aug 10, 2009
08/09
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their use public figures the real names are used. >> host: do you have a sort of long author's note. >> guest: i'm very proud of the author's note. i am very clear about my process. it is safe on topic everyone likes to talk about nonfiction and what it is. i'm a very clear in the opening of my books what i do and how i read my books. how do dialogue and how likely it the story. and, guess, i interviewed many people and there are a lot of court documents and i feel very strongly about the story that it's the story. but there's differences of opinion and different people who see the seams differently so that will be part of the fun. [laughter] >> host: i wish you fun in that. i hope it's fun. yeah, you did talk about how you condensed dialogue -- >> guest: it's necessary. a lot of the scenes took place over numerous amounts of time and it would have been impossible to tell the story without doing some of that. >> host: i know you got a little heat for bringing down the house -- >> guest: a little. that goes with the territory of narrative on fiction. i am creating my own john rot. peo
their use public figures the real names are used. >> host: do you have a sort of long author's note. >> guest: i'm very proud of the author's note. i am very clear about my process. it is safe on topic everyone likes to talk about nonfiction and what it is. i'm a very clear in the opening of my books what i do and how i read my books. how do dialogue and how likely it the story. and, guess, i interviewed many people and there are a lot of court documents and i feel very strongly...
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Aug 24, 2009
08/09
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simply not useful. and all this talk, we went through year after year, showing that we had a small yield, no collateral damage, nobody would know we have broken the rules, the nuclear threshold, we had that for years, just as we bottom off the notion that if we use a few weapons and restore deterrence, they have a massive retaliation, they think we would afct, that is what massive retaliation is for. a massive attack. we need to reinvestigate our concept of deterrence. it is really worn down. nobody understands it any more. >> not allowed to comment about. my sources are what the russians themselves say. i have seen what they have talked about, the lowering of the threshold of nuclear usage in 1999, where they have said in a 2000 document, they implied that nucle-weapons wouldn't write be be used against the crux of pieces of survival and the russian federation, and their deplment in the pacific and so on. i do think that they fully believe in nuclear deterrence. i agree with you about that. but their c
simply not useful. and all this talk, we went through year after year, showing that we had a small yield, no collateral damage, nobody would know we have broken the rules, the nuclear threshold, we had that for years, just as we bottom off the notion that if we use a few weapons and restore deterrence, they have a massive retaliation, they think we would afct, that is what massive retaliation is for. a massive attack. we need to reinvestigate our concept of deterrence. it is really worn down....
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Aug 22, 2009
08/09
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this is for both of us. >> g3h4jdtqi rñ senator mcgover you. i work for senator johnson but i'm going to give my book to my grandma wholÑy shares -- >> is this her name. >> i'm steve cohen, congressman from memphis. >> well, good to see you, steve. >> i look forward to reading your book. i'm going to take this on the plane to afghanistan this weekend. >> thank you. it's nicemk to meet you. i see references all the time. it'sy/v nice ó meet you. >> jerry austin worked with you and he managed my campaign in memphis. >> you live in memphis. >> it's an interesting city. >> lou's barbecue and elvis and >> didn't john grisham write a novel. >> several. i was in a couple of those movies. >> uh-huh. >> i was an extra. have you watched the nixon/frost -- >> did you watch nixon/frost, the movie. >> i thought it was really good. >> i thought it was excellent. $re so many parallels to bush and cheney. >> weren't there, though? >> the president does it, it's okay. the war. thank you, sir. in the long run, you're the winner. >> well, thank you. thank you.
this is for both of us. >> g3h4jdtqi rñ senator mcgover you. i work for senator johnson but i'm going to give my book to my grandma wholÑy shares -- >> is this her name. >> i'm steve cohen, congressman from memphis. >> well, good to see you, steve. >> i look forward to reading your book. i'm going to take this on the plane to afghanistan this weekend. >> thank you. it's nicemk to meet you. i see references all the time. it'sy/v nice ó meet you. >>...
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Aug 30, 2009
08/09
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and set us back. they felt they were making progss and they'd make militant demands. the moprozionist congressman in the united states was in brooklyn. fierce zionist congressman. as soon as truman back-stepped for a moment or wouldn' take a position that the zionists were supporting, he would condemn truman as a traitor, as a sellout and a fraud and antisemite and castigate him and that would drive truman crazy and he constantly got that pressu from the organized zionist community and we make the analogy in the book which i think is a good one between lincoln and e abolitionists and they were not satisfied with lincoln for many years they considered lincoln an enemy. and lo and beho, including frederick douglass but years later frederick douglass said lincoln was a hero and a great emancipator. even though he didn't do everything we wanted, he was a great man who brought the nation forward. well, it's the same thing here. truman was not a zionist. and he reacted viscerally against any tough militant
and set us back. they felt they were making progss and they'd make militant demands. the moprozionist congressman in the united states was in brooklyn. fierce zionist congressman. as soon as truman back-stepped for a moment or wouldn' take a position that the zionists were supporting, he would condemn truman as a traitor, as a sellout and a fraud and antisemite and castigate him and that would drive truman crazy and he constantly got that pressu from the organized zionist community and we make...
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Aug 13, 2009
08/09
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let me use the example i used to use has china. we tried a lot with china. china is a huge investor in the united states. remember how hillary was talking about this risk. my view if they have a lot of investments in the u.s. it will make them think twice about bombing us. if we have a huge integrated stake in these countries through economics, my view is this will make them much less likely to do politically disruptive defense, and plus the whole history of anbar goes and independence has been fraught with failure. the only thing that's clear every time you use protectionism is that you suffered enormously. protectionism hurts the protector as well as the country against which they are protecting and that is what happens and i think you will find in almost all of the literature and economics to support exactly what i'm describing. it is a failed toole, protectionism and not only is it infield toole it actually hurts the political process. it doesn't make north korea likes us better. it doesn't make cuba like us better and it doesn't make zimbabwe work bette
let me use the example i used to use has china. we tried a lot with china. china is a huge investor in the united states. remember how hillary was talking about this risk. my view if they have a lot of investments in the u.s. it will make them think twice about bombing us. if we have a huge integrated stake in these countries through economics, my view is this will make them much less likely to do politically disruptive defense, and plus the whole history of anbar goes and independence has been...
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Aug 22, 2009
08/09
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it gives us hope that we're building. the plan that they have been talking about is coming into play. and we came and stayed for the meeting but wen joyed it. >> it gave me goose bumps a need thing to see the agent got a hand. that surprised me but he did. it was a nice string. strasburg? i was most impressed with his attitude. >> he loves baseball and that came through i think this add as new level of excitement. i'm excited. and there is a guy lost for words. >> yes, yes. he may be the next one. it is you know what time it is. the hold of the day brought to you by just for men hair color. since the break leaders. jason berg berg and sean burnett with a couple. and as they kept them in the game you can stay in the game with just for men hair color. next, visit with hon dough, mr. baseball for all these years. that's when we come back in a minute. now at chili's -- start your three-course meals with a shared appetizer. choose two entrees from over 15 chili's favorites, then share a decadent dessert. chili's -- >>> one
it gives us hope that we're building. the plan that they have been talking about is coming into play. and we came and stayed for the meeting but wen joyed it. >> it gave me goose bumps a need thing to see the agent got a hand. that surprised me but he did. it was a nice string. strasburg? i was most impressed with his attitude. >> he loves baseball and that came through i think this add as new level of excitement. i'm excited. and there is a guy lost for words. >> yes, yes. he...
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Aug 29, 2009
08/09
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begin my book talks with the salutation fellow workers and friends by we is something i do not get used very often but what i like almost as much. fellow vermonters greetings. i come not from london but from gil heard vt. sonat very far away. because i went to begin with a literally a footnote from page 66 of my book why biography is difficult. a small illustration why this book that i started in 1991 is coming out now. 18 years later. in 1927 stone was eight reporter in new jersey the drop in philadelphia and his family owned a dry goods store which is a fairly common thing board use in small towns. all of these towns had wondered to do is there were running the dry goods store the feinstein family they had a dry goods store there was eight storer partly because they were latency they were slightly figures of fun on the feinstein family day wed order a packet of needles although they were only three blocks away sell one day one day she t into a conversation she could not get him to take his nose out of his book eventually they got into a conversation she said you should come to our hou
begin my book talks with the salutation fellow workers and friends by we is something i do not get used very often but what i like almost as much. fellow vermonters greetings. i come not from london but from gil heard vt. sonat very far away. because i went to begin with a literally a footnote from page 66 of my book why biography is difficult. a small illustration why this book that i started in 1991 is coming out now. 18 years later. in 1927 stone was eight reporter in new jersey the drop in...
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Aug 21, 2009
08/09
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tim kurkjian is back with us now. this is not just some number one pick out of high school, this is a polished, dominant pitcher. when will we see him in the major leagues? >> i don't think he'll see him this year. however -- however, you talked to a college coach recently and he said he's ready for the big leagues right now so my guess is stephen strasburg will pitch in the big leagues early next season. . and the nationals really need him. they need him for their rotation. they need him to bring people to the ballpark. they are not going to rush this kid under any kirks -- circumstances but i if i -- think he's far enough along that if he she's them anything in spring training he will be there next spring. >> what happened to throwing the guy out there and letting them pile up innings? >> a lot of college teams are doing a better job protecting these guys, plus the investment in so enormous in these guys, you have to justify, hey, we can't leave them in the minor leagues three years. so several pitchers have been up
tim kurkjian is back with us now. this is not just some number one pick out of high school, this is a polished, dominant pitcher. when will we see him in the major leagues? >> i don't think he'll see him this year. however -- however, you talked to a college coach recently and he said he's ready for the big leagues right now so my guess is stephen strasburg will pitch in the big leagues early next season. . and the nationals really need him. they need him for their rotation. they need him...
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Aug 30, 2009
08/09
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you are so used to sees five and think derrick mason. joe flacco has a couple of targets that he's comfortable going to in the crunch. it makes it a lot harder to defend. >> stan: that's why they have kelly. to be able to make the catches between people and down in the red zone. use that big body. >> gerry: flacco will stay in the shotgun with three receivers on third and 12. gets it's off complete to mcgahee. that means the kicking team will come on. steve hauschka, he missed a shot from 27 in the first half will get a shot here. this will be a 38-yarder. >> stan: kicked the other kick down the hash and missed it to the right. this is the important thing. how does he react after missing one? this is a very telling kick. >> gerry: sam koch holding. it's good. splits the uprights. steve hauschka bounces back and the ravens extend their lead. things we all look to haven't changed. like owning a home. watching our children grow. and retiring with confidence. so whatever you're looking forward to m&t bank is here to help you get there. m&t b
you are so used to sees five and think derrick mason. joe flacco has a couple of targets that he's comfortable going to in the crunch. it makes it a lot harder to defend. >> stan: that's why they have kelly. to be able to make the catches between people and down in the red zone. use that big body. >> gerry: flacco will stay in the shotgun with three receivers on third and 12. gets it's off complete to mcgahee. that means the kicking team will come on. steve hauschka, he missed a...
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Aug 3, 2009
08/09
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so that's how we use to see. we have an arm right here, this is our robotic arm and mounted to it is a camera, so it allows us to touch the surface. we also have two sets of instrumentation meaning we have to introduce samples directly to these experiments in order to make identifications and make a study of the surface, so one of those is a thermal and gas analyzer which is shown right here, and we have the microscopy analysis package which we call mecca for short. it has a lot of different components, it has a piece that i'll she you later, it has a chemistry lab inside of it, so that's where we introduce the sample. you take the robotic arm, take the sample, dump it into the mecca. inside the mecca is a wet chemistry lab, so you dump the soil and mix it with water. that allows us to taste the surface. and then once the material's in tiga, we bake it and look at the materials that come off, so that's like our nose. on the deck we have the weather station, so this is the weather mass with three different tempera
so that's how we use to see. we have an arm right here, this is our robotic arm and mounted to it is a camera, so it allows us to touch the surface. we also have two sets of instrumentation meaning we have to introduce samples directly to these experiments in order to make identifications and make a study of the surface, so one of those is a thermal and gas analyzer which is shown right here, and we have the microscopy analysis package which we call mecca for short. it has a lot of different...
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Aug 31, 2009
08/09
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i hope you'll join us. this is probably the most important american dialogue we've had in a long time and we work together and work if a bipartisan way, together i think we can make it better. thank you. [applause] >> thank you, bill. charles plain is the former national legislative chair for the virginia federation of chapters of n aasa rf. charles wked forany years, i think 33 years total for the departme of agriculture, including with the foreign agricultural service. mr. delaplain joine served wars president of the springfield chapter and as national legislative care for narp's national legislative committee. so please, met meelcome mr. charles delaplane. [applause] >> thank you. narf has a laundry list of issues, well aparts from health care. you'll find them outlined in this brochure that's out on the table in the back if the lobby and i wondered how much i would be boring you if i wept through some of them last week when george burke had the foresight and instinct to call and say charlie, don't talk
i hope you'll join us. this is probably the most important american dialogue we've had in a long time and we work together and work if a bipartisan way, together i think we can make it better. thank you. [applause] >> thank you, bill. charles plain is the former national legislative chair for the virginia federation of chapters of n aasa rf. charles wked forany years, i think 33 years total for the departme of agriculture, including with the foreign agricultural service. mr. delaplain...
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Aug 31, 2009
08/09
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the three largest;y of in unique, this is an accounting them once they've used one ofwxx us, 17 million- or 11.8% of u.. one technology,monster there are over 5.2 million job openings advertise across all major ongoing job boards. those may be duplicate. there are not saying our 5.2 million jobs. but to .2 million of those postingsre in august. so the concept that there are no jobs out there is false. there are jobs. it's finding them, being able to compete with them in standout in something that you have broadband access you ow you can get to those jobs. if you don't, you are further at a disadvantage because you don't even know where to look. maseratis he knows where the jobs are and where the trends are. we track and report monthly via the monster implement index, which many of your family with that comes out every thursday. thursday of every statistics in his early /pc @&p! around career exploratign and management tools, which are available today. in theeauty of these tools are they are effective and they are free to job seekers. they are free to anyone who is looking to better the
the three largest;y of in unique, this is an accounting them once they've used one ofwxx us, 17 million- or 11.8% of u.. one technology,monster there are over 5.2 million job openings advertise across all major ongoing job boards. those may be duplicate. there are not saying our 5.2 million jobs. but to .2 million of those postingsre in august. so the concept that there are no jobs out there is false. there are jobs. it's finding them, being able to compete with them in standout in something...
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Aug 14, 2009
08/09
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these are being used for buying buses. my county, we didn't get a lot of money but we are ordering buses that we would have been ordering. they are employing people. the fact that they have a long-term payoff is a good thing. my overall argument on the stimulus is consistent with what you are hearing on the other side of the dias which is i already for counter-cyclical revenue sharing that is indexed to the economy so it is a permit so when the economy goes up, it goes away. i think that is the right way to do it from an economic standpoint but it is true that the country has a huge deficit in infrastructure investment. in the short run, the most importuning to do is end the recession and get the economy back to potential ddp. that is what will close the gap in the short run. in the long run it is the productivity of the economy and i would argue our economy has suffered because most of the thing we have been rolling up deficits in the past eight years that we have not been worried about is not invested in our economy and
these are being used for buying buses. my county, we didn't get a lot of money but we are ordering buses that we would have been ordering. they are employing people. the fact that they have a long-term payoff is a good thing. my overall argument on the stimulus is consistent with what you are hearing on the other side of the dias which is i already for counter-cyclical revenue sharing that is indexed to the economy so it is a permit so when the economy goes up, it goes away. i think that is the...
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Aug 2, 2009
08/09
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it used to be 28-32. these guys started developing so much earlier and having great years when they were 25, 26. but the way they're in shape. >>> you're talking about two guys in great shape. they will be able to play until 35 minimally. and by the time you take 2 or 3 years and stretch it out, the other guys will be developing. they are young enough, and in their prime, they will be big parts of this organization, and the climb to respectability for the next 2, 3, 4 years. >> another guy that's been hitting well, cristian guzman. we remember that 0-21 slump he got into, but now he's into the groove. >> chris can just flat-out hit. as he came back from the injuries, and when he gets hot, he is a goose on the loose. .469 multi hit games, second in the league last year, third in the game. and he's running harder, hustling more. not that he ever dogged it, but he was more observant. he is losing range at shortstop. i don't think what the long term deal is with cristian guzman, because he is not, in my opini
it used to be 28-32. these guys started developing so much earlier and having great years when they were 25, 26. but the way they're in shape. >>> you're talking about two guys in great shape. they will be able to play until 35 minimally. and by the time you take 2 or 3 years and stretch it out, the other guys will be developing. they are young enough, and in their prime, they will be big parts of this organization, and the climb to respectability for the next 2, 3, 4 years. >>...
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Aug 30, 2009
08/09
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two carry for us 27 yards last year with the ravens. another one of those guy that cam cameron believes will play. parmele, 12 scouts from other teams at bank of america stadium. >> stan: this film is going to go around to all 32 or 31 teams outside of the ravens. >> gerry: that throws to parmele. a yard within the 1st down. he'll spot it at the 33. >> referee: time-out, carolina. their third one. >> stan: john fox is trying to win this one. >> gerry: john fox has not seen a win for his panthers. he wants them to have that feel good win in august. he's trying to see if his defense can stop the ravens and put a little pressure on the offense. stopped the clock with 2:19. don't be surprised if jerry rosburg and john harbaugh find themselves going back to steve hauschka. the question becomes do the ravens go for fourth and short if they don't get it here or they put steve hauschka in the pressure kick situation. >> stan: i wouldn't call it a pressure kick situation. it was the kick earlier. >> gerry: backs up and appears to change the play
two carry for us 27 yards last year with the ravens. another one of those guy that cam cameron believes will play. parmele, 12 scouts from other teams at bank of america stadium. >> stan: this film is going to go around to all 32 or 31 teams outside of the ravens. >> gerry: that throws to parmele. a yard within the 1st down. he'll spot it at the 33. >> referee: time-out, carolina. their third one. >> stan: john fox is trying to win this one. >> gerry: john fox has...
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Aug 24, 2009
08/09
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what do you think of this analysis that is very useful to us? >> i hate to disappoint you but i don't think the national security strategy of the russian federation is a misinformation document because there's so much in it which is geared towards compelling bureaucracy to perform that if it was a disinformation documents they would file 13 with it. this reminds me of a case, tim thomas is going to speak later, in 1996, spoke at the defense intelligence agency on russian military, 96, the russian military was at the bottom. we finished our presentation and one fellow said don't you think this is a misinformation ploy to lull us into believing they are weak? i don't know if you like the memo but the soviet union disappeared 5 years ago. the united states did not conduct a misinformation campaign that saddam hussein was a threat, it misinformed itself. there is that point. this is not -- everybody has classified numbers. you don't say we are going to attack on this access and so on. this is a political document that came out of a tough political s
what do you think of this analysis that is very useful to us? >> i hate to disappoint you but i don't think the national security strategy of the russian federation is a misinformation document because there's so much in it which is geared towards compelling bureaucracy to perform that if it was a disinformation documents they would file 13 with it. this reminds me of a case, tim thomas is going to speak later, in 1996, spoke at the defense intelligence agency on russian military, 96, the...
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Aug 16, 2009
08/09
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use that. that's part of, you know, working together longer and understanding the risk/reward. if this scenario happened the first race, we would have pitted. we wouldn't have done that. but because we've learned each other a little more, we understand the risk tolerances and maybe what our options are, it opened up the option to take advantage of that. it's just part of really running together. i know it sounds silly, you got to have that chemistry or whatever. but you gotta have that. you gotta have that. what we did before, how it happened. it's really a combination of everybody pulling together to make that call. >> for brian, you've won a race before, but does winning a race and getting the first win for an organization that helped from the ground up, does it feel any different? and all, does this make the season successful or do you need to make the chase to consider this season a success? >> i mean, winning a race in this sport, with the level of competition, is always pretty special. yo
use that. that's part of, you know, working together longer and understanding the risk/reward. if this scenario happened the first race, we would have pitted. we wouldn't have done that. but because we've learned each other a little more, we understand the risk tolerances and maybe what our options are, it opened up the option to take advantage of that. it's just part of really running together. i know it sounds silly, you got to have that chemistry or whatever. but you gotta have that. you...
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Aug 27, 2009
08/09
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te us what you mean by this? guest: the agents are dedicated and brave and it will take a bullet for the president. but since, ansecurity take us over -- since homeland security took over, there has been a question of the agents, where they will not do magnetometer or metal detection scrning at an event or shut it down early. when joe biden thrgh the first pitch in april, the secret service did know magnetometer screening whatsoever, over the objections of the baltimore field offices of the secret service and the detail itself. it is like letting passengers in an airplane without putting them thugh metal detectors. it is so basic. at other times, they will shut down screening when pressured. terrorists or a lone gunman can bring in firearms or grenades and assassinate the president or thvice president. when i tell former agents about this, they can not believe it. host: how high up the food chain, people still serving, do these decisions go? who is the ultimate person could said, you know what, the president will
te us what you mean by this? guest: the agents are dedicated and brave and it will take a bullet for the president. but since, ansecurity take us over -- since homeland security took over, there has been a question of the agents, where they will not do magnetometer or metal detection scrning at an event or shut it down early. when joe biden thrgh the first pitch in april, the secret service did know magnetometer screening whatsoever, over the objections of the baltimore field offices of the...
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Aug 14, 2009
08/09
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how we will use this lesson will depend on us. we should stop homogenization of us and let all different images come out. >> host: you're telling a fascinating story. it's a story about intimate, intimate secrets that you're putting out there. things that you've been silent about. it's fascinating but you are always left with the question, is it comprehensive? are there still things that you are being silent about? >> guest: i think as long as one lives there are things one has been silent about. the important -- i was just saying this morning that one of my favorite writers says that we live twice. once when we live in reality and once when we talk about ourselves through imagination. so as long as there's a voice, there are silences. and as long as there's silences we need voices. not only this story -- i think if i write 100 more, they're still not comprehensive, you know? >> host: thank you so much. >> guest: thank you. i appreciate this very much. >> 3 days of peace, love and music, 40 years ago this weekend, a half million p
how we will use this lesson will depend on us. we should stop homogenization of us and let all different images come out. >> host: you're telling a fascinating story. it's a story about intimate, intimate secrets that you're putting out there. things that you've been silent about. it's fascinating but you are always left with the question, is it comprehensive? are there still things that you are being silent about? >> guest: i think as long as one lives there are things one has been...
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Aug 21, 2009
08/09
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when are you going to help us out instead of taxing us into oblivion? and by the way most of us are sub s corporations so when you say you are going to tax the rest we fell into that category not because we take the money home we leave it in our business to invest. thank you. [cheers and applause] >> first of all, the first thing i would say is this: if you leave the money in the business it won't be taxed. we are talking about what is taken out in personal -- >> [inaudible] that is what the business -- why is it when people get anxious state of -- >> [inaudible] >> i understand they are angry. i don't understand what that means they can't have a rational conversation. ander and rational shouldn't be opposites. we are talking but only taxing the amount taken out of the business that's personal profit. secondly, when you say that nothing has been done for small business here's the point, nothing has been done to raise taxes. you say all we are doing is raising taxes. not a simple tax has been raised under the obama administration. >> [inaudible] >> what
when are you going to help us out instead of taxing us into oblivion? and by the way most of us are sub s corporations so when you say you are going to tax the rest we fell into that category not because we take the money home we leave it in our business to invest. thank you. [cheers and applause] >> first of all, the first thing i would say is this: if you leave the money in the business it won't be taxed. we are talking about what is taken out in personal -- >> [inaudible] that is...
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Aug 13, 2009
08/09
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let me use the example i used to use. we tried a lot with china. china is a huge investor putting it remember how hillary was talking about this that they owned so much? my view is if they have a lot of investments it will make them think twice about bombing loss. if we have a huge into could stake through economics my view is this will make them much less likely to do politically disruptive defense and plus the whole history of embargoes and independence has been fraught with failure. the only thing that is clear every time you use protectionism is that you suffered enormously. protectionism hurts the protector as well as the country against which they are protecting and that is what is happening and i think you will find almost all of the literature and economics to support exactly what i'm describing here. it is a failure tool, protectionism and not only a field tool it hurts the political process. it doesn't make north korea like a spider or cuba like us better or zimbabwe work better. rbrbrbrb@ úrbrb@ @ @ @ rbrb>s@ b nuclear power because it
let me use the example i used to use. we tried a lot with china. china is a huge investor putting it remember how hillary was talking about this that they owned so much? my view is if they have a lot of investments it will make them think twice about bombing loss. if we have a huge into could stake through economics my view is this will make them much less likely to do politically disruptive defense and plus the whole history of embargoes and independence has been fraught with failure. the only...
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Aug 6, 2009
08/09
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so many these days use the stretch no matter what. of course, sosa is a former starter as mentioned 88 major league starts. he knows all about the full wind up. >> rob: also a strike hit in the dirt. >> bob: 1-2 pitch. had him reaching and struck him out! a 1-2-3 for sosa. he retires 6-7 men he faces over two innings. bottom of the eighth coming up. nats still lead. some airlines charge your bag $15 dollars to ride in the bottom of the plane in the dark. no peanuts or nothin'. and then if your bag wants to bring one of its little bag friends for company, they charge another $25. that's just plain mean. why do they hate your bags? at southwest airlines, bags fly free. grab your bag. it's on! ( ding ) >> bob: on to the bottom of eighth inning. dukes, belliard, nieves. they'll face matt lindstrom. more on him in a moment. the potomac nationals, exciting promotion. they have a thursday cheers ladies' night. freebie championship pen on friday and fireworks on ate saturday and sunday family fun days. log on to potomacnationals.com or
so many these days use the stretch no matter what. of course, sosa is a former starter as mentioned 88 major league starts. he knows all about the full wind up. >> rob: also a strike hit in the dirt. >> bob: 1-2 pitch. had him reaching and struck him out! a 1-2-3 for sosa. he retires 6-7 men he faces over two innings. bottom of the eighth coming up. nats still lead. some airlines charge your bag $15 dollars to ride in the bottom of the plane in the dark. no peanuts or nothin'. and...
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Aug 1, 2009
08/09
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dc 50 joins us sunday. collin balester and paul maholm and the nats come over to -- home to face the nick johnson and florida marlins -- doesn't that sound strange -- on tuesday night. nick johnson hitting .295 for the nats heading to florida. >> rob: i was going to say how good are you if you're jake peavy and you have a blown out ankle, torn tendon. he had a cast up to his knee that was taken off shortly -- short time ago and they traded for him in chicago with the white sox. kenny williams has been after jake peavy for a year and finally got him. >> bob: swing and a miss on a pitch upstairs. john lannan has retired 5-6 last batters. and that's a pop-up out intoleft center. nyjer morgan is caught -- has caught hundreds of those here and that will do it for the pirates in the fifth. lannan is due to lead off. does he bat or is he done? stay tuned. pa announcer: final boarding call... all passengers... each with an average speed of 590 mph... almost as fast as you. nothing's gonna hold you down. grab your b
dc 50 joins us sunday. collin balester and paul maholm and the nats come over to -- home to face the nick johnson and florida marlins -- doesn't that sound strange -- on tuesday night. nick johnson hitting .295 for the nats heading to florida. >> rob: i was going to say how good are you if you're jake peavy and you have a blown out ankle, torn tendon. he had a cast up to his knee that was taken off shortly -- short time ago and they traded for him in chicago with the white sox. kenny...
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Aug 13, 2009
08/09
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it will allow us to have a much better use of energy and a much better use of transportation friday. so both the electric grid and the transportation grid need to become smart systems. i personally am very much in favor of looking at magnetic levitation trains. if you look at what the chinese are doing, i think it's very sobering that you can now go to shanghai and take a 250 miles an hour train and virtually all of the very, very high speed trains in the world are being built in china. and pudong in and of itself is a very sober place because 20 years ago there was almost nothing there and today the gross domestic product of pudong alone is $38 billion. and so you have -- just an enormous explosion of economic activity. spain now has a train that goes from madrid to sevilla at 186 miles an hour. the french have the tgv which is a very fast train that crosses most of france. japan has the bullet train. there are other projects -- i think that we have to fundamentally rethink our entire approach to rail, but i am opposed to simply giving money to an amtrak bureaucracy on behalf of hig
it will allow us to have a much better use of energy and a much better use of transportation friday. so both the electric grid and the transportation grid need to become smart systems. i personally am very much in favor of looking at magnetic levitation trains. if you look at what the chinese are doing, i think it's very sobering that you can now go to shanghai and take a 250 miles an hour train and virtually all of the very, very high speed trains in the world are being built in china. and...
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Aug 31, 2009
08/09
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to us? >> well, i hate to disappoint you, but i don't think the national security strategy of the russia federation is a misinformation document because there's so much in it which is so geared towards compelling the bureaucracy to perform that if it was misinformation, they would just, you know, file 13 with it. this reminds me of a case i and i believe tim thomas and jay kipp focused on. in '96 the russian military was really at the bottom of the ough, and we it should our presentations, and one fella came up to us and said don't you think this is all a disinformation ploy to lull us into believing they're weak? i said i don't know if you got the memo, but the soviet union disappeared five years ago. this is not, you know, the united states did not conduct, i don't think, a disinformation campaign that saddam hussein was a threat, i think it misinformed itself. >> [inaudible] >> so there's that point. and this is not a -- i mean, sure, everybody has classified documents. i mean, you should
to us? >> well, i hate to disappoint you, but i don't think the national security strategy of the russia federation is a misinformation document because there's so much in it which is so geared towards compelling the bureaucracy to perform that if it was misinformation, they would just, you know, file 13 with it. this reminds me of a case i and i believe tim thomas and jay kipp focused on. in '96 the russian military was really at the bottom of the ough, and we it should our...
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Aug 1, 2009
08/09
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>> it was used against pretty much anyone who is challenging the status quo, it was used against striking workers, it was used against african-americans who started to migrate from the rural south to the north, and it was a titanic in the marginalizing and silencing them. remarkable way is. >> christopher capozzola, "uncle sam wants you". >> thank you we're at the 2009 book expo american booksellers convention in new york with a johnny temple, publisher from berlin -- book in new york. what you have coming out this fall? >> this fall one of the books we are most excited about is a graphic novel by the great black film maker melvin van peebles, it is actually a book that inspired a new film of his that will begin appearing in august and september of this year simultaneous with the publication of the book and he is the godfather of the black exploitation movement. we are very proud to be working with them and encourage late right about now we are publishing a new book by that after an activist mike farrell who is best known for the role be taken on the tv show mash, one of the greatest tv s
>> it was used against pretty much anyone who is challenging the status quo, it was used against striking workers, it was used against african-americans who started to migrate from the rural south to the north, and it was a titanic in the marginalizing and silencing them. remarkable way is. >> christopher capozzola, "uncle sam wants you". >> thank you we're at the 2009 book expo american booksellers convention in new york with a johnny temple, publisher from berlin...
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Aug 3, 2009
08/09
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the statute also required us to look at ways to improve the overall risk -- default risk evaluation use with respect to residential mortgage loans. and what we have done is partnered with the fdic that is having a symposium in arlington at the fdic's center on september 16, following their annual banking research conference we will have a one day symposium on improving assessment of the default risk of single-family mortgages. we have asked for research. we made a call for papers, and got 35 very excellent papers submitted to us, and we are selecting among those to produce a full day schedule. and we will have john quigley, internationally known mortgage finance expert to moderate the symposium and issue a report to congress on that at the end of october. thank you very much. . . since it is almost august, what do you have in mind interim final rule, a delayed goal of carryover of 09 to 2010 or something else? >> jeff, clearly you know, the volatility of this market is made it difficult to get 09 done as well and getting the organization's staff to do this. the goal is to have a notice
the statute also required us to look at ways to improve the overall risk -- default risk evaluation use with respect to residential mortgage loans. and what we have done is partnered with the fdic that is having a symposium in arlington at the fdic's center on september 16, following their annual banking research conference we will have a one day symposium on improving assessment of the default risk of single-family mortgages. we have asked for research. we made a call for papers, and got 35...
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Aug 14, 2009
08/09
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eye 244
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and they used to be wrong. following the suggestion, the model should be constructed and the proven force. i have seen in the way economics is taught in the united states, there is an abuse of mathematics and an abuse of models. many students in the economic department in the united states think that economics is only about mathematical models, and this is absolutely wrong. the mathematical model is only one of the instruments that can be used to understand the facts and the facts going around in to make some predictions in certain cases. there is a lack of common sense in education. maybe this answers your question about what has changed and what should change. i am very worried by the fact that only, mathematics now is a requirement and also that the history of economic ideas is not talk any more. i think this is a big loss and it reduces the scope and the knowledge of students in the economic departments. >> marshall jaffe, and i'm an investment adviser. i was intrigued by your definition for your yardstick
and they used to be wrong. following the suggestion, the model should be constructed and the proven force. i have seen in the way economics is taught in the united states, there is an abuse of mathematics and an abuse of models. many students in the economic department in the united states think that economics is only about mathematical models, and this is absolutely wrong. the mathematical model is only one of the instruments that can be used to understand the facts and the facts going around...
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Aug 7, 2009
08/09
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eye 125
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i'll be using the 3g at&t laptopconnect card. he won't. so i can book travel plans faster, check my account balances faster. all on the go. i'm bill kurtis and i'm faster than andy roddick. (announcer) "switch to the nations fastest 3g network" "and get the at&t laptopconnect card for free". >> white sox looking for a three-game sweep of the >> white sox looking for a three-game sweep of the a.l. west-leading angels, top of the third, vlad the impaler at it again, impaling another baseball. vladimir guerrero with his first home run since coming off the d.l., his fifth of the year. angels win 9-5 and avoid the sweep. bobby abreu joins barry bonds, craig biggio, joe morgan, rickey henderson and willie mays as the only players in major league history with 250 home runs, 2,000 hits, 1,000 runs, 1,000 r.b.i.'s, 1,000 walks and 300 stolen bases. >> the a.l. central-leading tigers facing the orioles, bottom two, brandon inge. goodbye. a two-run home run for him to left field. his 22nd of the year. his first home run since june 12. orioles are now
i'll be using the 3g at&t laptopconnect card. he won't. so i can book travel plans faster, check my account balances faster. all on the go. i'm bill kurtis and i'm faster than andy roddick. (announcer) "switch to the nations fastest 3g network" "and get the at&t laptopconnect card for free". >> white sox looking for a three-game sweep of the >> white sox looking for a three-game sweep of the a.l. west-leading angels, top of the third, vlad the impaler at...
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Aug 6, 2009
08/09
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it is us playing. we need to step up our game and hopefully we will to it the rest of the year. >> we will go back up to bob. >> bob: thank you, debbi taylor. and nats, come from 6-0 down and join us friday for masn hd and they will get you distinguishing at 6:30. visit masn sports.com am and this is a presentation of masn. stay tuned. nats extra post game coming up right now with byron and ray from the booth. so long for just awhile. . >> they take down the florida marlins and now five of last 13 and 8-3. another comeback victory, the 20th of the year for the nationals and it feels so good. byron and ray knight with you. you felt that one, ray. you got the tie-in at eight and they started to roll it on on luis ayala. >> they were spectacular. and couldn't put hits together and now, the nationals are in a clutch situation and getting bunts down as nyjer did and jim riggleman has the ball club. every man in the dugout has a role and he is utilizing the roles. double switches and defen
it is us playing. we need to step up our game and hopefully we will to it the rest of the year. >> we will go back up to bob. >> bob: thank you, debbi taylor. and nats, come from 6-0 down and join us friday for masn hd and they will get you distinguishing at 6:30. visit masn sports.com am and this is a presentation of masn. stay tuned. nats extra post game coming up right now with byron and ray from the booth. so long for just awhile. . >> they take down the florida...
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Aug 7, 2009
08/09
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eye 428
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makes us go harder, and makes us drop a ball, we start over. >> he has no plans to let up. taking just one class, and will graduate in december and told urban meyer, he'll be in the office more than myer will. >> bob holtzman, espn. >> thanks, he could finish as one of the best to ever play in the s.e.c. needs 2900 yards. >> straight ahead, baseball's best rivalry renewed, yankees open the season, an update from game one of the four-game set ♪ right now on "espnews," tiger on the prowl for his second-straight win and well cops lefty back. >> yankees look for their first win over the red sox this season. following a visit to the commissioner's office, stallworth issues an apology. tebow's intensity level is already code red ♪ they go battle. [cheers] . >> ♪ a three-run homerun for bucky dent. >> the red sox are still breathing. >> there it goes, the yankees are going to the world series. >> red sox -- there they go again. >> boston has beaten the yankees all eight times. but, yankees, with a 9-4 lead, bottom of the 5th. make it 10-4. yankees have just scored another ru
makes us go harder, and makes us drop a ball, we start over. >> he has no plans to let up. taking just one class, and will graduate in december and told urban meyer, he'll be in the office more than myer will. >> bob holtzman, espn. >> thanks, he could finish as one of the best to ever play in the s.e.c. needs 2900 yards. >> straight ahead, baseball's best rivalry renewed, yankees open the season, an update from game one of the four-game set ♪ right now on...
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Aug 7, 2009
08/09
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i'll be using the 3g at&t laptopconnect card. he won't. so i can browse the web faster, email business plans faster. all on the go. i'm bill kurtis and i'm faster than floyd mayweather. (announcer) switch to the nation's fastest 3g network and get the at&t laptopconnect card for free. enshrinement saturday -- on espn. >> matthew berry here from espn.com fantasy with your fantasy news for friday, august 7 and you know i have a soft spot for guys with two first names. i also like guys who pitch well. brett cecil of the blue jays qualifies for both. he's 3-0 with a 1.67 e.r.a. over his last four games. 24 strikeouts in 27 innings. i like him for his start on friday. i have no idea what joe blanton needs to do to be owned in every league, but whatever it is he must not be doing it. still available in over 80% of leagues, blanton has been on fire recently. his 2.42 e.r.a. over his last 10 starts. i like blanton at home against the marlins. speaking of the marlins, let's stay with florida teams, talk about the rays' jeff niemann goes for tampa b
i'll be using the 3g at&t laptopconnect card. he won't. so i can browse the web faster, email business plans faster. all on the go. i'm bill kurtis and i'm faster than floyd mayweather. (announcer) switch to the nation's fastest 3g network and get the at&t laptopconnect card for free. enshrinement saturday -- on espn. >> matthew berry here from espn.com fantasy with your fantasy news for friday, august 7 and you know i have a soft spot for guys with two first names. i also like...
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Aug 7, 2009
08/09
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in eight minutes, he gives us some insight. >> in 2 1/2 minutes, tiger and phil renew their rivalry in lebron's home town. tiger and phil renew their rivalry in lebron's home town. this is kate. last year, kate went on the bud light port paradise cruise. i had a very nice time. kate "had a very nice time." for four days and three nights. she left the work world behind. way, way behind. for obvious reasons, we're protecting kate's identity. i told my boss i was having a root canal. i'm going to beat you! ( laughing ) ( sighs ) bud light port paradise. it's the most fun you might never want to talk about. it's much easier to find money at esurance. great auto insurance rates and lots of discounts! got insurance already? save more with esurance's "switch & save (tm) discount"! it also pays to shop online. you get esurance's "fast 5 (tm) discount" just for getting an instant online quote. - thanks, professor. - don't forget the good student discount. and there's even more discounts! it's no "secret" that you can save hundreds with esurance. make it your "mission" to click or call esurance
in eight minutes, he gives us some insight. >> in 2 1/2 minutes, tiger and phil renew their rivalry in lebron's home town. tiger and phil renew their rivalry in lebron's home town. this is kate. last year, kate went on the bud light port paradise cruise. i had a very nice time. kate "had a very nice time." for four days and three nights. she left the work world behind. way, way behind. for obvious reasons, we're protecting kate's identity. i told my boss i was having a root...
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Aug 7, 2009
08/09
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it was an important inning for us. it gave us a cushion. we just kept adding on. >> better to be 1 and 8 than 0 and 9. we are not happy but those are 8 games we can't getack. we walk too many guys but swung okay. >> in the 4th inning, they had a 3-run lead did boston. then an 8 run inning. jorge posada hit one of the yankees home runs. john smoltz is on the other end of that. what is up with that? >> i won't make any excuses. when i go out thrifeel like the pitch i am going to make is right one. it just happenings to not be in the position i want to be in. i want to wake up and go to work tomorrow and see what happens. >> it sounded like a good idea at the time but the smoltz comeback story hasn't been happy. he allowed 8 home runs in the last 15 innings and yet to go deeper than 6 innings in any start this year. in his last 4 starts he allowed more than one earned run per inning. >> is it time for the nation to push the panic button? we bring in adam jones from espn radio in boston. what is the level of concern there today? >> it's august
it was an important inning for us. it gave us a cushion. we just kept adding on. >> better to be 1 and 8 than 0 and 9. we are not happy but those are 8 games we can't getack. we walk too many guys but swung okay. >> in the 4th inning, they had a 3-run lead did boston. then an 8 run inning. jorge posada hit one of the yankees home runs. john smoltz is on the other end of that. what is up with that? >> i won't make any excuses. when i go out thrifeel like the pitch i am going to...
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677
Aug 6, 2009
08/09
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bob hayes no longer with us. neither is derrick thomas, man you got the chance to coach in kansas city. what a special, special linebacker he was. >> he was really special. talk about a guy that can change the complexity of a football game especially in the fourth quarter. he was a guy that could come off the edge. he had a lot of sack, 126 sacks. a great football player and also a great human being. >> and tragically taken far too soon. >> way too soon. the thing that amazed me about those two pass rushers is you'd have a game plan going in saying, these are the guys we have to stop. >> right. >> and then they'd get four or five sacks on you and just kill you. so when a guy can do that and beat your scheme and your players, that's a great one and they belong in the hall of fame. >> also going in, ralph wilson, owner of the buffalo bills, and randall mcdaniel, not only played in 12 pro bowls, started 12 executive pro bowls, one of the great offensive linemen the league has ever seen. you can see the hall of fame
bob hayes no longer with us. neither is derrick thomas, man you got the chance to coach in kansas city. what a special, special linebacker he was. >> he was really special. talk about a guy that can change the complexity of a football game especially in the fourth quarter. he was a guy that could come off the edge. he had a lot of sack, 126 sacks. a great football player and also a great human being. >> and tragically taken far too soon. >> way too soon. the thing that amazed...